August 31, 2025

Psalm 33:1-3

Shout for joy in the Lord, O you righteous! Praise befits the upright. Give thanks to the Lord with the lyre; make melody to him with the harp of ten strings! Sing to him a new song; play skillfully on the strings, with loud shouts.

Good morning church family,

When a man decides to pursue a woman, he must first summon sufficient nerve to approach her. Stuffing his self-conscious apprehension into his socks, allowing his stammering tongue to swing loose on its hinges, and tying himself to the mast; he steps up and makes his intentions known. Looking her in the eye, he delivers the lines he’s rehearsed as best he can. Whether the look she gives in reply be coy, quizzical, or bedeviling; he must not be deterred in finally laying it on the line. “Will you…,” he asks; his soul being poured like water into her hands, “will you go out with me?”

I’ve always been fascinated with this standard bit of language that men often use; asking a woman if she’d “go out” with him. No matter the feelings a woman may have tucked away in her heart for a man and no matter how those feelings may find expression in private conversation and correspondence; the man who is truly interested in a woman will eventually want her affection to be made public – very public. He wants her to walk into town on his arm, be seated with him at a café table for two, be introduced to everyone as his date, and – one day – he’ll want her to wear his ring and even take his name. He wants her to be “out” with him.

As I ponder on this, it reminds of a lovely bit of verse from King Solomon’s Song of Songs poem. The dashing, young king discovers a beautiful country girl and begins to woo her. This Shulammite woman is shy and humble; regarding herself as but a wildflower compared to the lovely, cultivated blooms of the King’s Court. She’s awed by the King’s stature, power, and handsome manner. He flatters her and showers her with gifts. But she wonders if his interest in her goes any deeper than her skin. What if she is just another conquest of his? What if the king is only interested in whatever pleasure she may bring him but not interested in her for who she is? What if Solomon is the type of man who will poach an elephant for its ivory? But these fears proved all for nothing. For you can almost hear the relief and rapturous joy in the young woman’s heart as she recounts what the King did for her: “He brought me to the banqueting house, and his banner over me was love.” (Song of Songs 2:4)

You cannot be more “out” than to be by the king’s side at his banqueting house. Solomon brings this country girl to the capital city of Jerusalem and there, in front of his family and friends, military aids and government officials, prophets and priests, the aristocratic elite and VIPs; there he makes his entrance with the young woman on his arm. And the banner over her – or, if you will, the billboard in big block letters, the press conference with a hundred microphones to pick up and broadcast the news, the trumpet’s fanfare blast – the banner over her was the king’s love. How wonderful for her.

I think of this sometimes when Jesus asked those men long ago to drop what they were doing to come and follow Him. What Jesus was asking them to do was to be publicly associated with Him and His kingdom. Christ wanted His disciples to be “out” with Him. I remember very well when the Lord called me and asked me to follow Him. He came to me in the privacy of my heart and in the sanctuary of my spirit and my reply was favorable. But, before long came the call to step out and make my commitment public. God called me to testify, to be baptized, to join the Church, and to take the name of Jesus; calling myself a Christian. I confess to having had some apprehension and fear. I think I would have liked for my interest in God to remain private. I wasn’t very comfortable exposing myself to the scrutiny of family and friends or with taking a position on right and wrong, eternity and judgment.

But, in the end, it was the Lord’s public commitment to me that led me to live my life for Him. Jesus left the perfection of Heaven to come and make a way for me to go back to Heaven with Him; walking the line of righteousness, battling Satan, and being lifted up on the cross to be the atonement for my sin. At Calvary, Jesus brought me into the banqueting house and His banner over me was love.

If the Lord is pursuing you today – don’t be shy about accepting His invitation. For, to be out with Jesus is far better than being left in and all alone without Him.

We’re looking forward to gathering together tomorrow morning to sing God’s praises, study His Word, and take steps on the path He’s marked out for us. We are His and He is ours – what a blessing! And what a joy to welcome others in to His banqueting house. May the Lord, mighty God, bless and continue to keep us!

  • Pastor Tate

August 24, 2025

Proverbs 12:1

Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge, but he who hates reproof is stupid.

Good morning church family,

Driving west through Worcester, Massachusetts on Interstate 290, the roadway seems a conveyor belt; rolling steadily along above the downtown just below. Looking out either side of the car, you see signs of industry: warehouses, smokestacks, depot yards, and shipping containers stacked two and three high. There are grander constructions as well: golden-domed government buildings, libraries with pillared front porches, and the stately headquarters of old-money industries. There are also plenty of those twenty-first century edifices that reflect the modern utilitarian indifference to beauty: unimaginative office boxes of glass and steel, soulless structures for the public to register their vehicles in, and community colleges that inspire neither community nor collegiality. And, of course, your eye is easily drawn to all the commercial properties with their loud colors and splashy logos: the fast-food restaurants, strip mall shops, and box store bonanzas. But there’s yet another thing you’ll be sure to see out the windows – steeples. Lots and lots of steeples.

All across America and throughout New England in particular, the cityscapes are punctuated by the spires of church steeples; each attracting the attention of the populace in order to point, day and night, to Heaven above. When you pause to consider them, steeples are really an odd kind of construction; serving little to no practical purpose. They don’t offer additional storage, house important plumbing or wiring, or create additional meeting space. But they do fill a prophetic role; calling poor souls caught up in the hustle and bustle of the world to pause for a moment and consider what lies above. Steeples also, without the help of a Google search, direct those weary souls to the houses of worship that sit beneath them, that they might apply within for fellowship, instruction, and spiritual nourishment. In this way, I love steeples. Like God allowing Jeremiah to be made a spectacle as he was paraded around in stocks or John the Baptist called to wear camel’s hair in the wilderness, churches attach these large steeples to the ridgelines of their sanctuaries. Church buildings should stand out amongst all the other constructions in our cities and towns that they might be both an outpost of the Above and a conscience for everyone treading the ground below. They’re a civic blessing.

But as you drive around New England and pass by the old churches standing tall on Main Street or towering over the town green, you may look up and notice that many of these steeples are in a sad state of disrepair. The paint is chipping, the roofing tiles are weathered and lifting in the wind, the slanted slats in front of the belfry are broken and missing, and the spire is rusted red. The builders designed the steeple to catch the eye and draw it upward and therefore the dilapidation cannot be hidden.

One such sad steeple stood above a prominent church building in the town my parents live in. The Brandon Congregational Church sits in the center of town and is featured prominently in the life of the village. The town’s parades go directly in front of the big brick building, the weekly farmer’s market is across the street, and the Fourth of July fireworks that explode in the night sky, illuminate the sacred landmark. It’s a beautiful building but I couldn’t help but notice how shabby its wooden steeple had become and it always made me blue whenever I saw it.

Well, upon our visit to my parent’s house this summer, I was delighted to drive into town and see scaffolding set up all around the church’s steeple and men busily working to restore it. As I paused to look at the progress, I noticed several work trucks parked along the street in front of the building. On the side of the trucks, I saw the name of the company: Robert Morgan Steeple & Building Restoration located out of Errol, New Hampshire. “Wow,” I said to Lisa and the kids. “Who knew there was a company devoted to maintaining and refurbishing steeples – and from good ol’ New Hampshire too!”

Come to find out there’s a name for such an occupation. Someone “whose work is building smokestacks, towers, or steeples or climbing up the outside of such structures to paint and make repairs” is called a “steeplejack”. A band of steeplejacks from Errol, New Hampshire had traveled to Brandon, Vermont to restore the steeple of the Congregational Church to a sterling and pristine condition that it might better fulfill its vocation in the village. I was thrilled! I’m looking forward to running into Brandon the next time I’m visiting my folks and see the finished work – I’m sure it’s beautiful.

I’ve often thought that every believer is a lot like a steeple. Our actions, manner, language, countenance, and lifestyle are intended to point people not just to Heaven above but to the Christ who dwells there; seated at the right hand of God. But I’m afraid it won’t require very close inspection to find that many of our personal steeples are, like those of the churches of our land, in a pretty rickety, ramshackle way. Our witness is not what it should be. We need to call upon the Lord to once again raise up the mighty men and build pulpits for powerful prophets who will once again call God’s people to pursue lives of holiness and righteousness. We need to implore the Lord to raise up some steeplejacks to restore the testimony of His saints. And just like with the Robert Morgan company – why not have the Lord start right here in good ol’ New Hampshire; calling you and me!

We’re looking forward to gathering together tomorrow morning to enjoy all that the Lord has prepared for those seeking Him. Because we have a Good Shepherd, our time will surely be spent in green pastures beside quiet waters. It’s going to be wonderful. May the Lord, mighty God, bless and continue to keep us!

  • Pastor Tate

August 17, 2025

Isaiah 51:1-3

“Listen to me, you who pursue righteousness, you who seek the Lord: look to the rock from which you were hewn, and to the quarry from which you were dug. Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who bore you; for he was but one when I called him, that I might bless him and multiply him. For the Lord comforts Zion; he comforts all her waste places and makes her wilderness like Eden, her desert like the garden of the Lord; joy and gladness will be found in her, thanksgiving and the voice of song.”